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German FM criticizes likely successor Schulz

The leader of Germany's social democratic SPD party Martin Schulz (L), German Vice Chancellor and Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel (2nd-L), and German Chancellor Angela Merkel (R) talk as they wait to be introduced to the German president during a New Year's reception at the presidential Bellevue Palace in Berlin, on January 9, 2018. (Photo by AFP)

German Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel lashed out Friday at his likely successor, Martin Schulz, saying his party colleague had broken a promise not to serve in Chancellor Angela Merkel's new cabinet.

"What's left is regret at how little respect there is in the Social Democratic Party in our dealings with one another, and how little someone's word counts for," Gabriel told the Funke newspaper group.

The rare public broadside at his comrades came after the SPD and Merkel's conservative CDU/CSU bloc announced a hard-fought coalition deal Wednesday that could see Schulz claim the foreign ministry.

It was Schulz's second major U-turn since September elections that ground the storied center-left party down to just 20.5 percent of the vote.

He had previously ruled out both repeating the "grand coalition" for a third time under Merkel and serving as a minister in her cabinet.

It has been only a year since Gabriel gave up the SPD leadership to make way for Schulz, who was then seen as the better candidate to challenge Merkel in September's election.

Although Gabriel is one of Germany's most popular politicians — scoring a 57-percent approval rating in an ARD television poll this month — there is no job waiting in Merkel's fourth government.

"I enjoyed taking on the office of foreign minister, and in the eyes of the public, I apparently did a good and successful job," Gabriel said.

"I regret that it's clear the public's esteem for my work means absolutely nothing to the SPD leadership."

German Vice Chancellor and outgoing Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel waits before a parliamentary group meeting of the German Social Democratic Party (SPD) in Berlin on February 7, 2018, after the conservatives and the social democrats sealed a deal on a new coalition. (Photo by AFP)

Gabriel is still in office in a caretaker capacity while the proposed coalition deal is put to a referendum of SPD members.

But he canceled a scheduled appearance at next week's high-profile Munich Security Conference in a show of pique.

Neither is he the only one feeling let down by the results of party leaders' days-long negotiating marathon earlier this week.

CDU members are smarting at having to cede the vital finance ministry to the SPD.

And politicians from across Germany's former communist East have complained that apart from Merkel herself, no-one from their region will sit at the cabinet table in Berlin.

"It's remarkable and regrettable that so far not a single politician from the East is represented in the cabinet," Reiner Haseloff, the state premier of Saxony-Anhalt, told news agency DPA.

(Source: AFP)


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